“News outlets and social media gave us all a first glimpse of the devastation, but we also observed the success stories in the properties saved because of firefighters and fire sprinklers,” the association said in a statement. “Buildings adjacent to the burning structure were saved by fire sprinkler systems that operated when glass windows failed from the heat of the fire exposure. Were it not for fire sprinklers reacting fast and firefighters following up, the fire could easily have spread into several adjacent structures.”

“Fire sprinklers saved our building and our office contents. Without them, we would have lost everything,” said NCFSA executive director Tim Bradley. “Some of our stuff got wet, but it’s still there and will dry out.” Because fire sprinklers are individually activated by intense heat, the only sprinklers that operated were near windows that failed from the heat of the nearby fire. In other areas, where sprinklers weren’t needed, the contents remained dry.

NFSA president Shane Ray said: “Had it not been for the fire sprinklers in adjacent buildings, many more firefighters would have been in harm’s way trying to save those buildings. Fire sprinklers minimized property damage, saved the property tax rolls, ensured sales tax continues, and saved many jobs at businesses that might otherwise have been destroyed.”

Although the building under construction that caught fire was required to have fire sprinklers, the sprinkler system wasn’t completed or operational at the time of the fire.

Ray said that had the fire occurred after the building was complete, a fire would have been a non-event. Fire sprinklers would have operated when the fire was small, and the fire would have been controlled and contained to the area of origin until the fire department arrived and completed extinguishment and salvage of the remaining property.